It was not Bob Hayward's day. The blond, stocky, 33-year-old Canadian, daring
driver of Miss Supertest II, three times a Harmsworth Cup winner, this
day ran into trouble quickly in the 1961 running of the Silver Cup race on the
Detroit River.

In tire first heat, 1-A, his boat struck Buoy No. 17 at the upper (eastern)
end of the oval course. Hayward reported the incident to the race committee,
automatically disqualifying himself and losing any points he might have scored.

Impatiently, the onetime farm boy who loved boats and speed sat out the
second heat, 1-B. A self-taught mechanic, he watched the pit crews work over the
big Rolls Royce Griffin engine. Only two days before, Hayward had called this Supertest,
one of three owned by J. Gordon Thompson, "a smooth riding boat, with all
the bugs ironed out."

When the seconds ticked off to the starting moment of the third heat, 2-A,
Hayward had Miss Supertest at full throttle, running almost abreast of
Bill Muncey in Miss Century 21 (light-colored boat in picture below).

As they roared through the first turn, at the Belle Isle bridge end of the
course, Hayward hardly slackened speed. Fighting for the lead with Miss
Century 21 and Miss U. S. I (circled in picture below), Hayward saw a
narrow gap between the two boats and drove through to his rendezvous with death.

Bob Hayward, as pictured before the 1959 Detroit Memorial Race

Stop watch superimposed on television screen shows two seconds remaining
before start of race as Miss Supertest II (arrow) passes in front
of judges' stand. Thirty seconds after start of this heat, Miss
Supertest's driver, Bob Hayward was injured fatally.

Two seconds from death, driver Bob Hayward zooms between boats slowing for
turn, takes the lead briefly before capsizing.

Dark underside of the ill-fated boat looms up as Miss Supertest II
goes into the flip that proved fatal to her driver

Righting herself in the water after flipping completely over, the Supertest
continues briefly on course because of her momentum, churning up spray as
before. Her driver already had been injured fatally at this point.

Calm
descends on the river as Miss Supertest drifts to a stop. Other
boats shot past her but stopped quickly and the race was cancelled. Driver
Bud Saile left his Thunderbolt and swam to Hayward, who was beyond
help

The fatal flip of Miss Supertest is shown in this dramatic sequence of
pictures, taken from the video tape of WWJ-TV The Detroit News, whose camera
crews caught the entire action in their live telecast and later rebroadcast it
from tape.

(Reprinted from the Detroit News Pictorial Magazine, September 24, 1961)

[Thanks to Tom Jewett for providing the newspaper clippings for this page
--LF]